Previous studies have shown that there are large difference in The order of nucleotides in a DNA or RNA molecule, or the order of amino acids in a protein molecule.sequences of
Genetic material found in mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy for the cell.mtDNA between modern humans and Neanderthals.
However, without a measure of the variation among ancient anatomically modern
humans and between them and modern humans, the data is incomplete. The first
study to examine the Genetic material found in mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy for the cell.mtDNAThe order of nucleotides in a DNA or RNA molecule, or the order of amino acids in a protein molecule.sequence of ancient anatomically modern humans was published in 2001, examining the Genetic material found in mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy for the cell.mtDNAThe order of nucleotides in a DNA or RNA molecule, or the order of amino acids in a protein molecule.sequences of 10 ancient
Australians. A summary of the HVR-1 The order of nucleotides in a DNA or RNA molecule, or the order of amino acids in a protein molecule.sequence of these
individuals (compared with the modern human reference The order of nucleotides in a DNA or RNA molecule, or the order of amino acids in a protein molecule.sequence, modern
Aboriginal A common variation in the sequence of DNA among individuals of a species or race.polymorphism, Neanderthals, and chimpanzees) can be found in table , below. The first thing that one notices is that the The order of nucleotides in a DNA or RNA molecule, or the order of amino acids in a protein molecule.sequence variation of
ancient humans compared to modern humans is at most 10 Two nucleotides on opposite complementary DNA or RNA strands that are connected via hydrogen bonds.base pairs (in LM3, the
most ancient specimen). As stated previously, the average variation among
population groups of modern humans is 8 Two nucleotides on opposite complementary DNA or RNA strands that are connected via hydrogen bonds.base pairs. LM3, dated at 62,000 years
old, varied the most from the modern human reference The order of nucleotides in a DNA or RNA molecule, or the order of amino acids in a protein molecule.sequence, but this
variation included only three bases shared with Neanderthal specimens. Since LM3
was a contemporary (or lived even earlier than the Neanderthals Determining the order of nucleotides in a DNA or RNA molecule, or the order of amino acids in a protein molecule.sequenced to
date), it is apparent that the human genome was already nearly
"modern" before Neanderthals died out. The authors of the study made a
big deal about the LM3 The order of nucleotides in a DNA or RNA molecule, or the order of amino acids in a protein molecule.sequence sharing similarity to a portion of One of the threadlike "packages" of genes and other DNA in the nucleus of a cell. Different kinds of organisms have different numbers of chromosomes. Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes, 46 in all: 44 autosomes and two sex chromosomes. Each parent contributes one chromosome to each pair, so children get half of their chromosomes from their mothers and half from their fathers.chromosome 11
in modern humans (thought to have been inserted into the human genome from the
Genetic material found in mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy for the cell.mtDNA). The authors concluded that the "loss" of the ancient Genetic material found in mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy for the cell.mtDNAvariation seen in LM3 could explain how Neanderthals do not share Genetic material found in mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy for the cell.mtDNA with
modern humans. Although it is certainly possible that part of Genetic material found in mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy for the cell.mtDNA might find
its way into the nuclear genome, it doesn't address the issue of how the
variation seen in the Genetic material found in mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy for the cell.mtDNA of LM3 was "lost." In fact, of the ten
The order of nucleotides in a DNA or RNA molecule, or the order of amino acids in a protein molecule.sequence differences between LM3 and the modern human reference The order of nucleotides in a DNA or RNA molecule, or the order of amino acids in a protein molecule.sequence, five
of those bases correspond to A common variation in the sequence of DNA among individuals of a species or race.polymorphisms found in modern Aboriginal people,
showing that those five bases were not lost at all. This leaves only a five base
difference, certainly within the range of that found among modern humans.
Overall, the lack
of "evolution" for humans over the last 60,000 years stands in sharp
contrast to the large differences seen between modern humans and Neanderthals.

Genetic material found in mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy for the cell.mtDNA Sequence Variation
of Ancient, Anatomically Modern Humans

Genetic material found in mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy for the cell.mtDNA Sample
(HVR-1)

*Genetic material found in mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy for the cell.mtDNA HVR-1

Adcock, G.J., E.S. Dennis, S. Easteal, G.A. Huttley, L.S. Jermiin, W.J.
Peacock, and A. Thorne. 2001. Of or referring to the mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy for the cell.MitochondrialDeoxyribonucleic acid: the chemical inside the nucleus of a cell that carries the genetic instructions for making living organisms.DNAThe order of nucleotides in a DNA or RNA molecule, or the order of amino acids in a protein molecule.sequences in ancient
Australians: Implications for modern human origins. Proceedings
of the National Academy of Science USA 98: 537-542 .

Another critical anatomical difference has been found between Neanderthals
and contemporary ancient humans. Wesley Niewoehner, an anthropologist
at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque has built 3D digital maps of the surfaces
of the metacarpals, the bones that make up the palm of the hand, from
Neanderthals and ancient humans. The shapes of the ends of the metacarpals reflect the kind
of grip these creatures had. Niewhoehner's maps suggest that the smaller, slimmer
hands of early modern humans were better suited to oblique grips - used
when holding a complex tool with a handle, such as a hammer.
Neanderthals, by comparison, were limited to grips as one has when holding a
stone or baseball. Such a grip would have been powerful (you wouldn't want to
shake hands with a Neanderthal), but not very dexterous. The anatomy of the
Neanderthals would have prevented them from engaging in fine motor skills, such
as carving and painting. The more sophisticated use of tools by early modern
humans would have given them a great survival advantage over Neanderthals,
possibly leading to the extinction of the Neanderthals.

The multiregional evolutionary theory claims that humans are descended from
multiple hominid forms (Neanderthals, Homo erectus, etc.). Recently,
proponents of this theory have claimed that fossils show that an archaic Homo erectus from Java
shared key features with living Asians and early modern humans in
Australia. Their conclusion was that Asian H. erectus passed on
some of its Deoxyribonucleic acid: the chemical inside the nucleus of a cell that carries the genetic instructions for making living organisms.DNA to modern Australians and Asians (Science,
12 January 2001, p. 293 ).
A recent genetic analysis of Asians, however, explodes this theory. The study,
examining more than 1000 Asian men, determined that all of these men came from
one source, between 35,000 and 89,000 years ago. The study is so convincing that
some multiregional evolutionists have now dropped this theory. At the
annual meeting of physical anthropologists in Kansas City, Missouri, one self-described "dedicated
multiregionalist," Vince
Sarich of the University of California, Berkeley, admitted:

"I have
undergone a conversion--a sort of epiphany. There are no old Y
chromosome lineages [in living humans]. There are no old Genetic material found in mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy for the cell.mtDNA
lineages. Period. It was a total replacement."

Gibbons, A. 2001. Modern Men Trace Ancestry to African Migrants. Science
292: 1051-1052.
Yuehai Ke, et al. 2001. African Origin of Modern Humans in East Asia: A Tale of
12,000 One of the two sex chromosomes that determines maleness in mammals, carried and passed down from males to males.Y chromosomes. Science 292: 1151-1153.

In a huge setback for evolutionists, scientists have discovered a true
crustacean in early Cambrian strata from Shropshire, England. In a recent issue
of Science, Drs. Siveter, Williams, and Waloszek. announced the discovery
of a fossil phosphatocopid ostracod, which is preserved extraordinarily well,
including all its delicate limbs cast in calcium phosphate, clearly allowing it
to be classified as a crustacean. Very few fossils of this great antiquity
reveal so much detail or can be interpreted with such certainty. Although the
discovery is clearly at odds with evolutionary theory, an analysis in the same
issue by Dr. Richard Fortey comes to the remarkable conclusion that this
discovery explodes the Cambrian explosion. Dr. Fortey believes that this
discovery will foreshadow the discovery of precursor organisms from the
pre-Cambrian. Of course, the fact that this has not happened yet does not hinder
the evolutionists from wildly speculating that the Cambrian explosion will be
overturned. Dr. Fortey does make a rather telling admission at the end of the
article (followed by the usual party line):

"Even if evidence for an earlier origin is discovered, it remains
a challenge to explain why so many animals should have increased in
size and acquired shells within so short a time at the base of the
Cambrian. At the moment, there are almost as many explanations as
there are animals caught in this belated "explosion." But it is more
than likely that the evolutionary fuse was lit long before the
Cambrian."